Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection

Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection
The doll, suggested to retail for $38, will feature Williams in all white with a green gem necklace, wristband, racket and tennis ball. (AP)
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Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection

Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection
  • Williams’ doll, to be released on Friday, will celebrate the tennis great and pay equity champion
  • The doll, suggested to retail for $38, will feature Williams in all white with a green gem necklace, wristband, racket and tennis ball

Venus Williams has a new Barbie, this one part of the dollmaker’s Inspiring Women collection.
Williams’ doll, to be released Friday, will celebrate the tennis great and pay equity champion with a doll wearing the uniform she wore while winning Wimbledon in 2007.
Williams’ win for the fifth of her seven grand slam titles was the first time a woman received equal prize money as the men at a top-level tournament.
The doll, suggested to retail for $38, will feature Williams in all white with a green gem necklace, wristband, racket and tennis ball.
Williams also had a Barbie doll released in May 2024 that highlighted nine trailblazing female athletes as part of Barbie’s 65th anniversary celebration.


Fans celebrate the 80th birthday of the Moomins, Finland’s most lovable literary cartoon family

Fans celebrate the 80th birthday of the Moomins, Finland’s most lovable literary cartoon family
Updated 12 August 2025

Fans celebrate the 80th birthday of the Moomins, Finland’s most lovable literary cartoon family

Fans celebrate the 80th birthday of the Moomins, Finland’s most lovable literary cartoon family
  • The chubby, white, hippopotamus-like characters have captivated readers worldwide
  • Characters were from Tove Jansson’s ‘The Moomins and the Great Flood’ published in 1945

TAMPERE, Finland: The Moomins, Finland’s most lovable literary cartoon family, are celebrating their 80th birthday this year.

The chubby, white, hippopotamus-like characters have captivated readers worldwide since author and illustrator Tove Jansson published “The Moomins and the Great Flood” in 1945. The children’s book features Moomintroll and Moominmamma in their search for the missing Moominpappa.

Jansson, a Swedish-speaking Finn who died in 2001, went on to write eight more books, multiple picture books and a comic strip about the Moomins in Swedish.

The series, set in the fictional Moominvalley, has been translated into more than 60 languages, and sparked movie and TV adaptations, children’s plays, art gallery exhibitions and an eponymous museum – plus theme parks in Finland and Japan. Finnair, the national carrier, has even put Moomins on its airplanes.

On Saturday, fans flocked to Tampere in southern Finland – home of the Moomin Museum – to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the 1945 publication as well as Jansson’s Aug. 9, 1914, birthday.

Fans from childhood to adulthood

For Rosa Senn of the United Kingdom, the festivities reminded her of her childhood. Her Norwegian mother, a fan since her own youth, read all of the tales to Senn and her sister growing up.

“Moomins have been such a special thing in my life, my whole life,” Senn said. “I just carried that love for Moomin, for Tove Jansson, with me into my adult life.”

When Senn met her now-wife, Lizzie, they were initially in a long-distance relationship for the first year and a half. Senn introduced Lizzie to the books and the couple used a plush doll of Moomintroll to feel closer to each other while they were apart. The doll was the ringbearer at their wedding, and they traveled to Tampere on their honeymoon.

The Senns also made an Instagram page documenting the trio’s adventures, which now has nearly 11,000 followers. The social media account has connected them with Moomin fans all over the world, including Stefanie and Michael Geutebrück from Germany.

Moomin merchandise

Stefanie Geutebrück said she remembers falling in love with the Moomins while watching their animations during her childhood in East Germany. She also brought the Moomins into her husband’s life, to the point where they also traveled to Tampere for Saturday’s entertainment.

“Now he’s a total fan and our apartment looks like a Moomin shop,” she said.

Beyond the Geutebrücks’ home, Moomin merchandise is hugely popular. There’s a massive market for Moomintroll, Moominmamma and Moominpappa souvenirs across the globe, and secondary characters like their friends Stinky, Sniff, Snufkin, Snork Maiden and Hattifatteners are also well-loved.

“The Moomin mug is one of the best-known collector items worldwide,” Selma Green, director of the Moomin Museum, said. “You buy a Moomin mug, you like the characters, you maybe see something on TV – but we all go back to the books, the original illustrations.”

Depictions of the character Stinky, described as a lovable rogue who has captured Moominmamma’s heart, generated debate and outcry in Finland this summer after reports emerged in Finnish media that Stinky was removed from a mural in an exhibit at the Brooklyn Public Library in New York due to concerns that the cartoon might be perceived as racist.

“A single image of Stinky was removed from the youth wing – which had the potential to be negatively misconstrued by young children without a fuller understanding of the Moomin universe,” the library said Monday in a statement to The Associated Press. “However, Stinky does appear in other areas of the exhibition and the Moomins books remain available for patrons to check out as they always have.”

Jansson’s drawings of Stinky shows the character with a dark, fuzzy body, with skinny legs and antennae. He has a reputation as an unsuccessful criminal – whose plans get foiled or he gets caught in the act – with an appetite for furniture and other wooden things.

“To me, this became as quite a big surprise because I have more thought about Stinky being close to a mole or a vole,” Sirke Happonen, a Moomins scholar and associate professor at the University of Helsinki, said of the library’s decision. “He’s an interesting character in many ways, like controversial and fun.”

Moominvalley as an escape

The Moomin stories honor the idea of family as a flexible concept. Diverse gender roles and queer themes also come across in Moominvalley, as well as in Jansson’s other works, reflecting her LGBTQ+ identity.

Her partner of more than 45 years, engraver and artist Tuulikki Pietilä, was memorialized as the character Too-ticky in “Moominland Midwinter.” The couple lived in Helsinki and spent their summers on the small rocky island of Klovharu in the Gulf of Finland until the 1990s.

Jansson’s stories also reflect war and catastrophe. The first book, “The Moomins and the Great Flood,” features the displaced Moomin family and was published in the final months of World War II. The conflict had ruined Finland, even though it had remained independent, and one of the author’s brothers went missing during part of his time at the front.

While Jansson sought to portray Moominvalley as an escape, Moomin stories have always had a mixture of peril and comfort.

“Her first Moomin book came out in a dark era. She felt it was very difficult to paint, and she started writing what she called a fairy tale, but she excused herself not to include princesses or princes,” Happonen said.

Moominvalley was borne of a need to find beauty at a time when Jansson’s existence, along with everyone else in Finland, felt frail.

“I think she wanted to make a contrast – Tove Jansson loved contrasts – by writing about this beautiful world, full of friendship and love,” Happonen said.


The Seine in Paris is open for swimming. Tourists and residents embrace it as temperatures soar

The Seine in Paris is open for swimming. Tourists and residents embrace it as temperatures soar
Updated 12 August 2025

The Seine in Paris is open for swimming. Tourists and residents embrace it as temperatures soar

The Seine in Paris is open for swimming. Tourists and residents embrace it as temperatures soar
  • At the Grenelle site in the west of Paris, visitors swim and sunbathe with a unique view of the Eiffel Tower, with small fishes darting near the surface
  • The swimming areas are expected to get even more crowded as a heatwave arrives in the region on Tuesday

PARIS: Swimming in the Seine is an increasingly popular tourist attraction in the French capital — and a must-do for Parisians themselves. Thousands of people have enjoyed a dip in the river since three public bathing sites opened last month, the first in over a century.
The swimming areas are expected to get even more crowded as a heatwave arrives in the region on Tuesday. Paris has been placed under “high vigilance” by national weather service Meteo France, with temperatures up to 38 degrees Celsius (100 Fahrenheit) expected.
At the Grenelle site in the west of Paris, visitors swim and sunbathe with a unique view of the Eiffel Tower, with small fishes darting near the surface.
Water quality is tested daily to conform with European regulations. Swimming in the Seine had been illegal since 1923, with a few exceptions, due to pollution and risks posed by river navigation. The new bathing sites are possible following a 1.4 billion euro ($1.6 billion) cleanup that made it suitable for Olympic competitions last year.
“Imagine that,” said Constanze Martens, a tourist from Mexico. “Swimming with view of the Eiffel Tower and in pure natural water, clean, safe, and with all this lovely people too, you have every age here.”
On Monday, the water temperature in the Seine was 22 degrees Celsius (71 Fahrenheit).
“It’s quite warm, warmer than the sea, which was quite surprising, and is very pleasant,” said Elisabeth Lorin, from the Paris eastern suburb of Montreuil.
Until the end of August, bathing sites are open for free at scheduled times to anyone 10 or older or 14 or older, depending on the location. Details are in the Paris city hall website, in English as well. Each swimmer must be equipped with a yellow buoy, attached to their waist, for safety reasons. There are changing rooms with lockers.
The site welcomes between 800 and 1,200 visitors per day, with a limit of 200 at any one time, said the manager of the Grenelle site, Yann Forêt.
Paris Deputy Mayor Pierre Rabadan last week said over 40,000 people had swum at the sites since they opened on July 5. That’s despite almost two weeks of closures largely due to rainy weather, which increases water pollution upstream.
“Right now, the water quality is excellent and we have optimal conditions with warm weather,” Rabadan told The Associated Press on Monday. He said the daily decision to open the sites depends on weather conditions and factors including water flow rate and any known pollution.
Several lifeguards monitor the sites, occasionally using their whistles to remind swimmers not to jump or leave the perimeter. No major incident has been reported, Rabadan said.
Marina Gicquel, a 22-year-old lifeguard at Grenelle, said the main difference from a swimming pool is the river current, along with the murky water.
“You can only see people’s heads sticking out. That’s why buoys are useful,” Gicquel said. “And it’s also quite deep. It’s three to five meters (10 to 16 feet) deep, so people find no foothold.”
Some visitors, like Australian Thurkka Jeyakumar, had been skeptical about swimming in the Seine, citing the river’s murky color and bacteria issues.
Unsafe levels of E. coli or other bacteria appear during prolonged periods of rain that overwhelm pipes, leading untreated wastewater to flow into the river instead of a treatment plant. Last year, some Olympic competitions were postponed for that reason.
In the end, Jeyakumar gave it a try because she lost a bet.
“For the moment, I have to say that it was much nicer and cleaner than I thought it would be,” she said. “So the bet worked out for the better!”


Swarm of jellyfish shuts French nuclear plant

Swarm of jellyfish shuts French nuclear plant
Updated 11 August 2025

Swarm of jellyfish shuts French nuclear plant

Swarm of jellyfish shuts French nuclear plant
  • Reactors 2, 3, and 4 stopped automatically when the filter drums of the pumping stations became packed with with a “massive and unpredictable” swarm of jellyfish

PARIS: Four reactors at France’s Gravelines nuclear power plant were shut down late Sunday due to a swarm of jellyfish in the filter drums that pull in cooling water, operator EDF said on Monday.
The plant in northern France is one of the largest in the country and cooled from a canal connected to the North Sea. Its six units produce 900 megawatts of power each, or 5.4 gigawatts in total.
Reactors 2, 3, and 4 stopped automatically when the filter drums of the pumping stations became packed with with a “massive and unpredictable” swarm of jellyfish, and reactor 6 went offline shortly after, EDF said.
The entire nuclear plant has now temporarily halted production as the other two units are offline for planned maintenance, EDF data showed.
Several species of jellyfish are native to the North Sea, and are often seen around the shoreline in the summer when the waters are warm.
The event did not affect the safety of the facilities, staff or the environment, EDF said.


Indian top court orders roundup of stray dogs in Delhi

Indian top court orders roundup of stray dogs in Delhi
Updated 11 August 2025

Indian top court orders roundup of stray dogs in Delhi

Indian top court orders roundup of stray dogs in Delhi
  • At least 60,000 stray dogs live on the streets of Delhi, according to India’s Livestock Census of 2012
  • India’s Supreme Court warned of action against animal activists who obstruct the removal of dogs

NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court on Monday ordered the removal of tens of thousands of stray dogs from the capital, citing public safety concerns after a surge in dog bites.

India is home to millions of stray dogs and deadly attacks, particularly on children and the elderly, are regularly reported by the city’s media.

At least 60,000 stray dogs live on the streets of Delhi, according to India’s Livestock Census of 2012, the most recent data available.

Some suggest that number to be now far higher, with large rival dog packs patrolling parks and residential neighborhoods across the city.

The country accounts for more than a third of global rabies deaths, according to the World Health Organization, a crisis exacerbated by a lack of sterilization programs and legal restrictions on canine culling.

The court asked city authorities to set up dog shelters within eight weeks, and maintain daily records of the canines captured.

“What is important, and without which the entire exercise would go futile, not a single stray dog should be released,” it said, which applies to Delhi and its satellite suburbs, a megacity home to some 30 million people.

The court warned of action against animal activists who obstruct the removal of dogs.

It also ordered a 24-hour helpline to be set up to report dog bites and officials must publicize locations where anti-rabies vaccines are available.

Data tabled in the Indian parliament showed more than 3.7 million cases of dog bites and 54 suspected human deaths from rabies in 2024.

Other estimates peg the number to be nearly twice as high, with Delhi alone accounting for roughly 2,000 cases of dog bites every day.

In middle class neighborhoods, many of Delhi’s strays are beloved by their residents despite lacking formal owners, with some dogs clothed in special canine jackets to keep warm during the winter.

But they are also a hazard to humans, with Indian media regularly reporting on the mauling of young children by aggressive dog packs.


$7K worth of Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store, authorities say

$7K worth of Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store, authorities say
Updated 09 August 2025

$7K worth of Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store, authorities say

$7K worth of Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store, authorities say
  • Robbed store located in La Puente, 29 km east of Los Angeles
  • Suspects used a stolen Toyota Tacoma in the incident, say police

LOS ANGELES: A group of masked thieves stole about $7,000 worth of Labubu dolls from a Los Angeles-area store earlier this week, authorities said.
The incident took place early Wednesday morning at a store in La Puente, a city about 18 miles (29 kilometers) east of Los Angeles, the LA County Sheriff’s Department said. The department said the suspects used a stolen Toyota Tacoma in the incident, which was recovered shortly afterward. The agency said it was investigating the case and did not have additional information.
The labubu, a toy created by Hong Kong-born artist Kasing Lung, have become a popular collectible item a decade after the toothy monsters were first introduced.
Toy vendor One Stop Shop said in an Instagram post that the thieves “took all of our inventory trashed our store.” The store posted surveillance footage showing a group of people wearing hoodies and face coverings breaking in. The suspects are seen shuffling through items and carrying boxes out of the shop.
“We are still in shock,” the store said in its post, urging people to help them find the thieves.